Title: Logarithms
1Logarithms
2Logarithms
- Logarithms to various bases red is to base e,
green is to base 10, and purple is to base 1.7. - Each tick on the axes is one unit.
- Logarithms of all bases pass through the point
(1, 0), because any number raised to the power 0
is 1, and through the points (b, 1) for base b,
because a number raised to the power 1 is itself.
The curves approach the y-axis but do not reach
it because of the singularity at x 0.
3Definition
- Logarithms, or "logs", are a simple way of
expressing numbers in terms of a single base. - Common logs are done with base ten, but some logs
("natural" logs) are done with the constant "e"
as their base. - The log of any number is the power to which the
base must be raised to give that number.
4- In other words, log(10) is 1 and log(100) is 2
(because 102 100). - Logs can easily be found for either base on your
calculator. Usually there are two different
buttons, one saying "log", which is base ten, and
one saying "ln", which is a natural log, base e.
It is always assumed, unless otherwise stated,
that "log" means log10.
5Chem?
- Logs are commonly used in chemistry.
- The most prominent example is the pH scale.
- The pH of a solution is the -log(H), where
square brackets mean concentration.
6Review Log rules
- Logc (am) m logc(a)
- Example log2 X 8
- 28 X
- X 256
- 10log x X
- 10 to the is also the anti-log (opposite)
7Example 2 Review Log rules
- Example 2 log X 0.25
- Raise both side to the power of 10
- 10log x 100.25
- X 1.78
8Example 3 Review Log Rules
- Solve for x 3x 1000
- Log both sides to get rid of the exponent
- log 3x log 1000
- x log 3 log 1000
- x log 1000 / log 3
- x 6.29
9Multiplying and Dividing logs
- The log of one number times the log of another
number is equal to the log of the first plus the
second number. - Similarly, the log of one number divided by the
log of another number is equal to the log of the
first number minus the second. - This holds true as long as the logs have the same
base.
10Multiplying and Dividing logs
- Log (a b) log a log b
- Log (a / b) log a log b
11Try It Out Problem 1 Solution log (x)2 log 10
- 3 0
Try It Out Problem 1 Solution
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12Simplify the following expression log59 log23
log26
- We need to convert to Like bases (just like
fraction) so we can add - Convert to base 10 using the Change of base
formula - (log 9 / log 5) (log 3 / log 2) (log 6 / log
2) - Calculates out to be 5.535
13Solve the following problem. 7 ln5x
ln(7x-2x)
- Simplify! 7 ln 5x ln 5x (PEMDAS)
- Log (ln) rules 7 2 ln 5x Adding goes to mult.
when you remove an ln. - (7 / 2) ln 5x
- 3.5 ln 5x
- Get rid of the ln by anti ln (ex)
- e3.5 eln 5x
- e3.5 5x
- 33.1 5x
- 6.62 x
14Negative Logarithms
- Negative powers of 10 may be fitted into the
system of logarithms. - We recall that 10-1 means 1/10, or the decimal
fraction, 0.1. - What is the logarithm of 0.1?
- SOLUTION 10-1 0.1 log 0.1 -1
- Likewise 10-2 0.01 log 0.01 -2
15SUMMARY
Common Logarithm Natural Logarithm
log xy log x log y ln xy ln x ln y
log x/y log x - log y ln x/y ln x - ln y
log xy y log x ln xy y ln x
log log x1/y (1/y )log x ln ln x1/y (1/y)ln x
16ln vs. log?
- Many equations used in chemistry were derived
using calculus, and these often involved natural
logarithms. The relationship between ln x and log
x is - ln x 2.303 log x
- Why 2.303?
17Whats with the 2.303
- Let's use x 10 and find out for ourselves.
- Rearranging, we have (ln 10)/(log 10) number.
- We can easily calculate that
- ln 10 2.302585093... or 2.303
- and log 10 1.
- So, substituting in we get 2.303 / 1 2.303.
Voila!
18In summary
Number Exponential Expression Logarithm
1000 103 3
100 102 2
10 101 1
1 100 0
1/10 0.1 10-1 -1
1/100 0.01 10-2 -2
1/1000 0.001 10-3 -3
19Sig Figs and logs
- For any log, the number to the left of the
decimal point is called the characteristic, and
the number to the right of the decimal point is
called the mantissa. - The characteristic only locates the decimal point
of the number, so it is usually not included when
determining the number of significant figures. - The mantissa has as many significant figures as
the number whose log was found.
20SHOW ME!
- log 5.43 x 1010 10.735
- The number has 3 significant figures, but its log
ends up with 5 significant figures, since the
mantissa has 3 and the characteristic has 2. - ALWAYS ASK THE MANTISSA!
21More log sig fig examples
- log 2.7 x 10-8 -7.57 The number has 2
significant figures, but its log ends up with 3
significant figures. - ln 3.95 x 106 15.18922614... 15.189
- 3 lots
mantissa of 3
22OK now how about the Chem.
- LOGS and Application to pH problems
- pH -log H
- What is the pH of an aqueous solution when the
concentration of hydrogen ion is 5.0 x 10-4 M? - pH -log H -log (5.0 x 10-4) - (-3.30)
- pH 3.30
23Inverse logs and pH
- pH -log H
- What is the concentration of the hydrogen ion
concentration in an aqueous solution with pH
13.22? - pH -log H 13.22 log H -13.22 H
inv log (-13.22) H 6.0 x 10-14 M (2 sig.
fig.)
24QED